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Akbar
Ganji Begins his Fourth Year in Prison
Journalist Akbar Ganji will start his fourth
year in prison on 22 April, despite repeated calls by Reporters
Without Borders for his uncon-ditional release since he was
jailed for alleged subversion in 2000. Another journalist,
Ahmad Zeid-Abadi, was recently returned to prison to serve
the rest of his sentence. |
"Ganji's only 'crime' was to do his job as
an investigative reporter and Zeid-Abadi is also paying dearly for
criticising the regime," said Reporters Without Borders secretary-general
Robert Ménard. "We demand the release of both of them
as well as eight others in prison."
Ganji, who worked on the daily paper Sobh-é-Emrooz, was arrested
on 22 April 2000 after appearing before the press court accused
of writing that leading figures, including former President Hashemi
Rafsanjani and former intelligence minister Ali Fallahian, had been
involved in the murder of opponents and intellectuals in late 1998.
He was also accused of taking part in a conference
in Berlin on 7-8 April 2000 about reform in Iran which the government
charged was "anti-Islamic." He was sentenced on 13 January
2001 to 10 years in prison but the appeal court reduced this to
six months on 15 May. However on 15 July, the supreme court quashed
the May sentence on technical grounds and imposed a six-year jail
sentence. He has been in solitary confinement for the past 70 days
and, unlike other political prisoners, is not allowed to phone his
wife, who says prison doctors have advised that he be hospitalised
outside the prison to treat his back problems. Officials have refused
to allow this.
Zeid-Abadi, of the reformist daily Hamshahri and
the monthly Iran-é-Farda, was ordered by legal officials
to report to Teheran's Evin prison on 13 April after being sentenced
on appeal on 10 March to 13 months in jail (eight for "anti-regime
propaganda" and five for "putting out false news")
and a five-year ban on "public and social activity," including
journalism. He had been sentenced by the press court on 17 April
2002 to 23 months in prison and a five-year ban on "public
and social activity" for "making propaganda against the
Islamic regime and its institutions." The court accused him
of making "provocative speeches that threatened national security."
He has already served seven months and six more remain.
Journalists Hossein Ghazian (arrested last October) and Abbas Abdi
(arrested in November) were each sentenced on appeal early this
month to four years and six months in prison - four years for "passing
information to enemy countries," and six months for "making
propaganda against the Islamic regime."
Ghazian, a director of the Ayandeh public opinion firm and a journalist
on the daily paper Nowrooz, and Abdi, another Ayandeh director,
former editor of the daily Salam and former staff member of many
reformist papers, were accused of "receiving money from the
US polling firm Gallup or from a foreign embassy." They were
arrested after the official news agency IRNA, published last 22
September an Ayandeh poll that showed 74.4 per cent of Iranians
favoured a resumption of ties with the United States
U S - Syria, A
Conflictive Relation
Another
Journalist and Website Editor Arrested
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